FINDING · DETECTION
In the Russia and Mexico incidents, spam tweets showed statistically significant spikes at fixed sub-hour intervals (5 and 15 minutes past the hour respectively), consistent with cron-job automation. Despite this automation, both campaigns deliberately mimicked human diurnal activity patterns — spam volume peaked at the same hours as legitimate traffic — to evade time-based anomaly detection.
From 2013-verkamp-five — Five Incidents, One Theme: Twitter Spam as a Weapon to Drown Voices of Protest · §3.2, Figures 2–3 · 2013 · Free and Open Communications on the Internet
Implications
- Sub-minute periodicity (cron-style spikes) is detectable even when diurnal patterns are spoofed — combine hourly-scale and minute-scale timing analysis to separate automated from human posting.
- Classifiers relying solely on time-of-day distributions will be fooled by diurnal mimicry; minute-level inter-arrival regularity must be a separate feature.
Tags
Extracted by claude-sonnet-4-6 — review before relying.